Excuse Me!? "7 Southern US Accents You WON'T Understand"

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  • čas přidán 15. 04. 2024
  • G'day guys today we are reacting to 7 Southern US Accents you won't understand.
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Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @6906Gaming
    @6906Gaming Před 3 měsíci +695

    I understood them all just fine. I don't see any issues here.

    • @PatrolNation
      @PatrolNation  Před 3 měsíci +25

      Lol.

    • @staceysmith8173
      @staceysmith8173 Před 3 měsíci +4

      😂😂

    • @claytontwilliams6096
      @claytontwilliams6096 Před 3 měsíci +45

      I understood every word too. I was born, raised, and lived all my life in eastern North Carolina and there are 3 completely different accents from western, central, and Eastern North Carolina. I work in Raleigh, NC (central NC only 1.5 hours away from where I live) and my coworkers make fun of my accent.

    • @lorin6673
      @lorin6673 Před 3 měsíci +25

      I grew up in metro NY and I understood them all too.

    • @Firemedic361
      @Firemedic361 Před 3 měsíci +12

      Accents are difficult everywhere! Sydney is easy, Darwin a lot harder. Or Cockney in England. It just takes listening lol

  • @timesthree5757
    @timesthree5757 Před 3 měsíci +375

    Im a southerner and it all sounds like talking to me.

  • @jazzupthejazz
    @jazzupthejazz Před 2 měsíci +99

    ok i didnt realize how southern i was until i watched these type of videos and understand everything these people are saying lol

    • @PatrolNation
      @PatrolNation  Před 2 měsíci +7

      Lol.

    • @mm-ou5ux
      @mm-ou5ux Před měsícem +1

      I'm from the PNW (Pacific Northwest) and still understood them.

    • @ToAoDd
      @ToAoDd Před 29 dny +1

      Same here, every word of the whole video he was watching lol. I've been in Arizona for 15 yrs and people here tell me I have a thick accent all the time. I can't hear it until I'm having a conversation with a fellow Southerner.

    • @maryefromky
      @maryefromky Před 26 dny

      me too, even the cajun people LMAO. i'm from Kentucky. every bit of it! its just my people talkin to each other in slightly different dialects, i love it

    • @mystrenula3911
      @mystrenula3911 Před 2 dny

      I'm Alaskan and I understood everything they said

  • @JupiterN624
    @JupiterN624 Před 3 měsíci +23

    Anyone that says that America has no culture has never been to Louisiana.

    • @joshuaeason3426
      @joshuaeason3426 Před měsícem +2

      Or anywhere else. I've been all over this country and things are different culturally city to city and state to state. Hell, ask someone from Dallas how they feel about Houston 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @wtk6069
    @wtk6069 Před 3 měsíci +183

    There's a ton of Scots-Irish influence to at least the Appalachian part of the South. When I traveled to Ireland and to Scotland, I was able to communicate in both places with no serious issues. I even detected certain ways of pronouncing words and some phrases that I had never heard anywhere else outside of Appalachia. These language artifacts had survived for hundreds of years on both sides of the ocean! It caused me to feel a genuine connection there, especially in some parts of rural Ireland.

    • @IgoZoom1
      @IgoZoom1 Před 3 měsíci +15

      My great-grandmother grew up in the foothills of the Appalachians (where the GA/TN/NC borders meet). She used words that I haven't heard since, but I've discovered they were derived from her Irish ancestors. That is fascinating to me.

    • @kellychamplin1800
      @kellychamplin1800 Před 2 měsíci +10

      The Irish influence, in particular, is very heavy in the Piedmont and Eastern NC… My family hail from Ireland, settled in Jones, Lenoir, Carteret, Onslow and Duplin Counties in NC starting around 1700… Sounds weird, but “Who your people?” is almost a survival method - I’m related to half the damn families - including Lumbee! - in Eastern NC! It’s why I married a guy from Illinois!!😂😂

    • @mescko
      @mescko Před měsícem +5

      We also have this influence to thank for Bluegrass, which I love.

    • @johnstewart150
      @johnstewart150 Před měsícem +7

      On a bus trip in Queensland the European girl sitting next to me asked if I understood the bus driver. I said no. She was relieved. Later at a small town stop, the driver and store clerk had trouble understanding each other, both Aussies! I've been everywhere in Oz and never ran into this before. I am an American world traveler

    • @J-rt9ez
      @J-rt9ez Před měsícem

      It’s also English influence. It depends on the states. Our cantor is switched up but this guy sounds southern himself and don’t even realize it lol

  • @GorillasAndGardens
    @GorillasAndGardens Před 3 měsíci +197

    Oh wow! Many us GenXers grew up watching Justin Wilson cook Cajun recipes on PBS when home sick from school. ❤ “I gawr-on-tee” lol I guarantee.

    • @jdstep97
      @jdstep97 Před 3 měsíci +4

      That's how I remember him! Thanks! I kept thinking he was familiar. Man this brings back memories now.

    • @nicks3935
      @nicks3935 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Now that some goood stuff right there.

    • @kathenson606
      @kathenson606 Před 3 měsíci +11

      Got your onnyun? You know you need. Onnyun.

    • @deborahdanhauer8525
      @deborahdanhauer8525 Před 3 měsíci +5

      I loved him so much!!❤️🐝🤗

    • @draperamanda
      @draperamanda Před 3 měsíci +3

      Yup! Watched him all the time.

  • @Mvtobebo
    @Mvtobebo Před 3 měsíci +62

    All from the same country speaking the same language but 200 accents. God bless America!

  • @moorek1967
    @moorek1967 Před 2 měsíci +54

    And beyond that, black people have an accent, Hispanic people have an accent, Jewish people have an accent, Native Americans have an accent.

    • @vapoet
      @vapoet Před měsícem +11

      An accent? Dozens of accents within those ethnic groups as well.

    • @chrisd6287
      @chrisd6287 Před 18 dny

      @@vapoet yes

    • @Taekwondorocks
      @Taekwondorocks Před 7 dny +1

      The Boston accent 😎

    • @DeliverUsSomeEvilPodcast
      @DeliverUsSomeEvilPodcast Před 3 dny

      Black people don't have a real accent it's like when the gays speak its a fake inflection they add when they're around whites

    • @valkyrie1066
      @valkyrie1066 Před 2 dny

      Phraseology; or accent? Those actually have...differing grammer as well.

  • @marydearing1300
    @marydearing1300 Před 3 měsíci +273

    I am a Southern girl… and yes I have a Southern accent and proud of it!!!!! I’m from Alabama (RTR!!)
    I did not say anyone said anything derogatory- I just said that I am proud of my Southern accent and heritage!!!!!

    • @kierstenridgway4634
      @kierstenridgway4634 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I'm sure it's beautiful. I don't think anyone is saying otherwise. ❤️✌️

    • @kierstenridgway4634
      @kierstenridgway4634 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I'm sure it's beautiful. I hope nobody is saying it isn't. ❤️✌️

    • @marydearing1300
      @marydearing1300 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@kierstenridgway4634 I didn’t think anyone did.. don’t understand why would say that.

    • @marydearing1300
      @marydearing1300 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@kierstenridgway4634 Nor did I think that!!!

    • @brians2869
      @brians2869 Před měsícem +2

      I understand them fine, but they're thick, definitely..

  • @CaptainJacksIsland
    @CaptainJacksIsland Před 3 měsíci +225

    5:50 guy was saying "kin", as in kinfolk, or people you're related to, not "can" or "can't" 😆
    "We're all kin somewhere, ain't we, Gene?"
    "Yeah. Along the line, yeah."

    • @fllthdcrb
      @fllthdcrb Před 3 měsíci +15

      Makes sense. Although Lyle here was thinking not of "can", but of Scots (and Middle English) "ken", meaning "to know". Not a completely crazy idea. But yeah, you're right about the word that was actually being used.

    • @ViviFuchs
      @ViviFuchs Před 3 měsíci +5

      ​@@fllthdcrb you're right but I find it hilarious that with some Southern accents can and kin are homophones which means that this person's interpretation isn't wrong lol.

    • @no_rubbernecking
      @no_rubbernecking Před měsícem

      He wasn't saying "can", he was saying "ken". 🌝

    • @cantstopcooking929
      @cantstopcooking929 Před měsícem +3

      @@no_rubbernecking kin

    • @no_rubbernecking
      @no_rubbernecking Před měsícem +1

      @@cantstopcooking929 No. The Australian-Scots guy hosting this did not say "kin", because _he didn't even know that's what they were saying!_ He said "KEN". He even helpfully defined it for those of us who might not know.

  • @jdstep97
    @jdstep97 Před 3 měsíci +39

    2:13- "Why I talk the way I do? Because the good Lord blessed me with this accent. I like it. I like it just fine."

  • @LairdKenneth
    @LairdKenneth Před 3 měsíci +19

    While I do now live in Oregon, I am a native Appalachian. Working at Lowe's, there have been several occasions in which Southerners come in and ask questions that my fellow workers cannot understand. I will respond appropriately, of course, and my co-workers look at me like, you understood that?. Funny.

    • @CoryAlphin
      @CoryAlphin Před 2 dny +1

      My parents we're from the south and I always get made fun of in the north, but I will always "worsh" my clothes lol!

  • @patrickholland6848
    @patrickholland6848 Před 3 měsíci +31

    As a Midwesterner I went down to Alabama for a visit and stopped in at a Cracker Barrel restaurant and the young lady who was serving us had a beautiful southern accent that just sang but she was so embarrassed by it that she actually apologized for her accent and I just had to tell her how beautifully musical her accent is and that she didn't have an accent, being from there, but that we were the ones with the accent. I know it sounds like is was contradicting myself a little.

  • @sunshine13546
    @sunshine13546 Před 3 měsíci +101

    I'm dying at his reaction! "I can't understand what they're saying," me knowing exactly what they're saying!!! But I am from South Carolina, so that might help

    • @jonadabtheunsightly
      @jonadabtheunsightly Před 3 měsíci +6

      Did you understand that one singer from Louisiana? I'm from Ohio, and I had no trouble with the others, but that guy... I don't even.

    • @shivan1209
      @shivan1209 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@jonadabtheunsightly I had the same reaction and in CA. I think it's because that gentleman was speaking Cajun which is its own dialect.

    • @Daehawk
      @Daehawk Před 3 měsíci +6

      I felt like a universal translator from Star Trek.

    • @sunshine13546
      @sunshine13546 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@jonadabtheunsightly I could pick out a few words , it was a love song, I think.

    • @wordforger
      @wordforger Před 3 měsíci +1

      Texas and same.

  • @marianncadmus9572
    @marianncadmus9572 Před měsícem +12

    My parents were from Czechoslovakia. When I moved from New Jersey to North Carolina I NEVER had a problem with anyone’s accent.

  • @galaxyrider1391
    @galaxyrider1391 Před 3 měsíci +17

    My family has lived in central Missouri for 200 years. I wanted to clear up that those men said "Kin" that means someone that is related to you, i.e. family.

  • @iamsquatty
    @iamsquatty Před 3 měsíci +47

    I'm from Alabama, and I was able to understand pretty much every person speaking 😂😂 its funny to watch others react to southern accents 😊💜💜

    • @user_angelmum
      @user_angelmum Před 3 měsíci +2

      Yes to you because you are American
      The guy commentating is an Aussie ..
      Americans say the same about our accents .

    • @trailryder5813
      @trailryder5813 Před 18 dny +1

      I'm born, raised and live Alabama ROLL TIDE but have learned conversational Arabic and Swahili. So now imagine someone with a Alabama accent speaking either one of those languages. Surprisingly people who speak both languages understand me!

    • @meepsies669
      @meepsies669 Před 17 dny

      @@user_angelmum I understand Australian people just fine and I'm southern. Nothing wrong with not understanding an accent that you're not used too. Hell, even I didn't fully understand what some of those people were saying. IN person is always a different experience though. Usually a lot more clearer.

    • @deadassdgaf100
      @deadassdgaf100 Před 10 dny

      ​@@trailryder5813ROLL TIDE!
      i know that's right!

  • @JustMe-vk4fn
    @JustMe-vk4fn Před 3 měsíci +68

    We lived in TX for a few years in the early 80's. While I was paying for items at the local grocery store, a check out girl said "Hah" which I knew was "Hi" and I smiled and said "Good morning. How are you?". She said "Fahn" which I knew was "fine". As I paid for the groceries she looked up at me and said "Yew mus be frum summer's else becawse yew don't talk du-uh-um lak we dew". I'd never heard the one syllable word d-u-m-b have three syllables when it was pronounced but I knew enough to smile and tell her that *both* of us have accents because of where we grew up and there was nothing "dumb" about either one of us. She lit up like a candle.
    When it's all you hear around you as a child, it's just an accent and I guarantee they view *you* and *me* as having accents too.

    • @rhondacrosswhite8048
      @rhondacrosswhite8048 Před 3 měsíci +7

      Well day-um. You sound lak a smart lil gal.

    • @JustMe-vk4fn
      @JustMe-vk4fn Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@rhondacrosswhite8048 Nah. Ah ain't so verry smart atall. :) I just follow the Golden Rule as best ah can.

    • @user-rk4jx4zc5d
      @user-rk4jx4zc5d Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@JustMe-vk4fn I don't have an accent. I think I may be mistaken for Texan. I've been told that I put spaces between my words and I guess that makes me easier to understand. I was born in Kentucky.

    • @user-yt5xf5vi1p
      @user-yt5xf5vi1p Před měsícem +4

      we do not talk quite that bad

    • @JustMe-vk4fn
      @JustMe-vk4fn Před měsícem

      @@user-yt5xf5vi1p It was wonderful to hear. :D

  • @user-ok1eu4tn7l
    @user-ok1eu4tn7l Před měsícem +7

    I’m from Alabama born,raised and permanently living proudly there and I have a very Strong Southern Accent because when I have to travel up towards DC people literally will purposely engage me in Conversation just to Hear It.

  • @SkyFlower-hn5wg
    @SkyFlower-hn5wg Před 3 měsíci +13

    I never noticed I had a southern accent till I went skiing in a Utah and everyone sounded so weird to me lmao

    • @echt114
      @echt114 Před 2 měsíci +4

      Prior to the Utah visit, did you never have access to a TV, radio or internet where you could hear other people speak?

  • @TimberWolf762
    @TimberWolf762 Před 3 měsíci +47

    I worked for one of the major oil companies in the late 1980s and I was in Lafayette and New Orleans, Louisiana for years. If you turned on the TV early-morning in Lafayette, you could catch the weather forecast in Cajun French. They also had billboards in French. If you travelled down the back roads to one of those great Cajun restaurants with no sign out front and an oyster-shell parking lot, French was used as often as English.

    • @sharonporter7132
      @sharonporter7132 Před měsícem +4

      I hope we never lose that part of our culture in Louisiana. Cajuns are wonderful people.

  • @debvit2353
    @debvit2353 Před 3 měsíci +63

    When we moved from Connecticut to South Carolina, understanding the “natives” was pretty tough initially. After 7 years of living here, we can understand most southern accents.

    • @tweetbleat487
      @tweetbleat487 Před 3 měsíci +8

      I also moved from Connecticut to South Carolina in 2016. I didn't really have trouble understanding the accents because my sister has been living here since 1976 and she has a heavy southern accent. The difficulty I had was getting used to southern culture. I lived in CT for 46 yrs up until 2016.

    • @MsVakong
      @MsVakong Před 2 měsíci +6

      My niece had that issue moving from CT to GA. I heard she came home from school crying for almost 2 months because she had no idea what the teacher was saying.

    • @kellychamplin1800
      @kellychamplin1800 Před 2 měsíci +5

      😎You have been officially “assimilated”. You’re no longer “that damn Yankee kid”, just the kid who moved down from Up North!🤣🤣🤗🤗

    • @1-God1-Truth1-Life1-Forever
      @1-God1-Truth1-Life1-Forever Před 2 měsíci +7

      Please tell me y'all left your CT behind and embraced the culture you chose to join.

    • @debvit2353
      @debvit2353 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@1-God1-Truth1-Life1-Forever Absolutely! When I left CT, I left all their BS behind. I love everything about SC, from religion to politics

  • @susandavis7192
    @susandavis7192 Před 3 měsíci +7

    My mom was born in central Louisiana and had a strong "twang" in her speech. When she was in the Marine Corps in WW2 she was an air traffic controller at Cherry Point NC. The pilots complained that they couldn't understand her so she got taken off the radio and given a desk job. LOL

  • @KentuckyLadyLiberty
    @KentuckyLadyLiberty Před 3 měsíci +10

    This made me laugh. My mother's family were from West Virginia and moved up to Ohio for jobs. Grandma never lost her WV accent, though mom did quickly due to prejudices against it. Then when I was a girl we moved to Kentucky. I went to the mountains with a friend once to visit her daughter (she was orignally from the Washington DC area), and every time someone said something in a store, my friend would lift her eyebrows and finally said to me, "You don't talk exactly like them, but you understand what they're saying. You'll have to translate for me." I still tease her about that. People used to say Appalachian dialects were very old English, but modern linguists have linked them more to Ulster Scots, which is where many of them actually originated from. And it's not pronounced Appa-lay-shun," it's "Appa-Latch-un."

    • @ruthsaunders9507
      @ruthsaunders9507 Před 3 měsíci +1

      My Mom grew up in Ohio with that accent and when she left home she worked really hard to get rid of it. Now she wishes she hadn't. I have a tape of her when I was a baby and she sounds adorable.

    • @KentuckyLadyLiberty
      @KentuckyLadyLiberty Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@ruthsaunders9507 It was Ohio that made fun of the West Virginia accent in my mother. When I was 18, I'd go visit relatives in Ohio and everyone would make fun of my accent up there, too, because I picked up a Kentucky accent. In fact, I once blacked out a tooth with makeup and put on a pair of overalls to go to the store with a cousin in Ohio, because we thought it was hilarious.

  • @tommym5023
    @tommym5023 Před 3 měsíci +32

    Understood most of them and that's coming from a bloody SCOT!!!! 😉

    • @Meg0307
      @Meg0307 Před 3 měsíci +18

      That's because your people influenced a lot of these accents. Lol

    • @tommym5023
      @tommym5023 Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@Meg0307 all our accents are still way better than Australian 🤫😁

    • @PatrolNation
      @PatrolNation  Před 3 měsíci +9

      Lol my first accent was Scottish.

    • @Fulano.de.Tal.
      @Fulano.de.Tal. Před měsícem +1

      Do you know why the aussie accent is so different?

  • @ashleymcgriff270
    @ashleymcgriff270 Před 3 měsíci +95

    Alabama girl here! I am proud and blessed to be a Southerner. Love my accent, love my state and I love all y'all!❤

    • @51953bdog
      @51953bdog Před 3 měsíci +7

      Alabama here too. Have friends in Cali who like to make fun of my accent lol.

    • @amyfarley2305
      @amyfarley2305 Před 3 měsíci +7

      @@51953bdog Alabama the Beautiful! Ain't it though!

    • @bamakat8531
      @bamakat8531 Před 3 měsíci +10

      ROLL TIDE ROLL

    • @janismitchell3122
      @janismitchell3122 Před měsícem +4

      Mobile here and yes indeed ROLL TIDE

    • @ashleymcgriff270
      @ashleymcgriff270 Před měsícem +3

      @janismitchell3122 hey girl! I live in Daphne, we're neighbors.😊

  • @patriciabock4299
    @patriciabock4299 Před 2 měsíci +4

    In the mountains of Eastern Kentucky they speak what is called the "Queen's English." Scottish people settled in those mountains and still carry on Highland Culture to this day!

  • @DWeezy62
    @DWeezy62 Před 3 měsíci +15

    I'm from Southeastern Ohio, Appalachia. I understand all of these accents perfectly. I speak pretty plain American English, taught to us in school, but if I get excited and start talking faster, my Appalachia accent starts coming out. 🙂

  • @carolburnett190
    @carolburnett190 Před 3 měsíci +45

    You need to clean out your ears, Lyle! I understood every word. When you said the word “ken” that’s what Scottish folks use. That guy was sayin “kin” (sometimes said akin) which means related. The guy talking about moonshine was the late legendary Popcorn Sutton. The lady talking about the weather was Cajun. The guy talking about chickens (blue shirt, red suspenders) was Justin Wilson, a famous Cajun chef whose catch phrase was, I gar-on-tee!” The Southern Appalachian region supposedly has the closest to a Shakespearean accent.
    I gotta a story about a Cherokee storyteller! He was a facilitator at a retreat I attended close to the NC and TN line. Most of the attendees were either yankee or midwestern, so we would have a wonderful time entertaining the fellow attendees by the Cherokee guy saying something in Appalachian and me translating. They would be completely baffled that I could understand every word. I grew up in the same basic area, but eliminated my accent.
    He didn’t even touch on Virginia tidewater or NC coastal accent. I can barely understand them! They don’t go out in a boat-they go “oot in the boot.”
    When I was in my last couple of years of college, I dropped my accent. I’m glad I don’t have the mountain nasal twang anymore, but I regret the loss of my southern accent. Unfortunately, way too many people think if you’re from the mountains or even from the south, that you’re automatically dumber than dirt.

    • @nicks3935
      @nicks3935 Před 3 měsíci +3

      "oot in the boot" reads more like a Minnesota thing to me but I was born and raised here in West Virginia. I was able to understand everyone on the video the cajun was the closest to throwin me but I was able to understand it well.

    • @KentuckyLadyLiberty
      @KentuckyLadyLiberty Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@nicks3935 So are you getting out your kittle to cook down some ramps with taters? I wasn't able to get back to the old homeplace this spring, so I had someone mail me ramps this year and I kind of felt sorry for my mailperson. I could smell them through the mailbox.

    • @LisjeVal
      @LisjeVal Před měsícem +2

      My French teacher in suburban Chicago seemed so native to the language that most people assumed he was Quebecois. He was actually from the Kentucky Appalachians, and he could easily drop back into that accent (when we goaded him as high schoolers). But it proved to many that accents are not that hard to learn properly.

    • @Lorrainecats
      @Lorrainecats Před měsícem +2

      ​@nicks3935 oot in a boot sounds a bit Canadian to me. I live in lower Michigan, and we have at least four accents. People near Lake Michigan sound a bit like Chicagoans. Detroit suburbs sound different than Flint and Saginaw.

  • @tomratcliff3755
    @tomratcliff3755 Před 3 měsíci +14

    My name is Tom, when I first moved to New Orleans I turned around every time someone asked what TIME it was

  • @dngillikin
    @dngillikin Před 3 měsíci +6

    I was born and raised just outside Norfolk, Virginia. My normal adult accent approximates North American Broadcast Standard English. My Southern was a little stronger when I was a child.
    My mother's family came down from the mountains and had more of a sharp twang. My father's side of the family came up from North Carolina and had more of a drawl.
    I'll let my Southern out occasionally . . . If I'm angry or exasperated, I'll deploy the twang. If I'm trying to appear charming or nonthreatening, I'll let loose the drawl.
    I'm pretty okay with deciphering most of these accents. Cajun's difficult, but if I concentrate hard enough I can usually work it out. The same goes for some of the deeper mountain accents.
    Additional exposure makes comprehension easier.

  • @Haderask247
    @Haderask247 Před měsícem +3

    The Island you speak of is Roanoke Island,NC. The accent you shared was Ocracoke,NC. Roanoke was where the lost colony was. Ocracoke is miles south. The Ocracoke accent is called Brogue. You can drive to Roanoke you can only fly or take a ferry to Ocracoke. The Brogue is probably the most interesting accent in the US. It will also be gone soon.

  • @billh5923
    @billh5923 Před 3 měsíci +10

    At Montana State University I had a physics professor from South Carolina that was difficult for us northerners to understand. One day he said "we have a 'coal' of 'war' 'producn' a 'lectric' feel". I turned to the guy next to me and said "how do you spell 'war'?" (rhymes with tar). Now I know he meant wire but it didn't sound like wire.

  • @ambvurt3739
    @ambvurt3739 Před 3 měsíci +56

    I find it funny that people all over the world accuse Americans of being uncultured but when it comes to them understanding America they can’t. I can understand almost all accents (broadly speaking) internationally including my fellow Americans. I’m not trying to be mean I just find it ironic.

    • @Ann12681
      @Ann12681 Před měsícem +8

      Americans outside of the south don’t always understand them either

    • @CrazedPop
      @CrazedPop Před měsícem

      I can't understand the kids these days with all their made up lingo. Learn one thing, and they have four more they are using. I can make out what they are saying, but still won't know what they are saying.

    • @Strawberryfearsforever
      @Strawberryfearsforever Před měsícem +1

      @@Ann12681That’s not really true now is it. I’ve never had an interaction with anyone from anywhere else in this country where there was a problem because of anybody’s accent. I was a flight attendant for 15 yrs and I’ve never seen anybody have this problem.

    • @marissaalonzo7997
      @marissaalonzo7997 Před 10 dny

      Internationally, Americans ARE generally the most uncultured in my experience and many travels. When I spot fellow Americans abroad, I avoid them as much as possible because they will invariably embarass our country with what they don't know. Also, our English vocabulary is in general deplorable compared to what I will call International English. So many people from other countries speak English better than we do and know more about history than we do.

  • @shawnsmith780
    @shawnsmith780 Před 2 měsíci +4

    Yep. Understood them all.
    Lived/worked in the southern Missouri Ozarks. There's a good mix there of heavy and not so heavy southern accents (even though it's not deep south) I can go into the deep south and understand everyone.

  • @Gutslinger
    @Gutslinger Před měsícem +5

    14:21 - That's Justin Wilson. He had an awesome cooking show. He was funny too.
    A lot of southern folk know and love him.

  • @stephanietip
    @stephanietip Před 3 měsíci +7

    Born and raised in the Smokey mountains in Tennessee, and I understood every one of them

  • @angielofton6372
    @angielofton6372 Před 3 měsíci +44

    My parents were from southwest Georgia so i understood most of the accents. You cracked me up, Lyle. The guy who was talking about “kin” was talking about one’s family. ”Ken” is used for understanding or knowing.

    • @IgoZoom1
      @IgoZoom1 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Were your parents from the Albany area? My family has been in North Georgia for 200 years. It's fascinating how Georgia alone has at least 6-7 dialects.

    • @angielofton6372
      @angielofton6372 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @IgoZoom1 Hey there! My parents were from Baker County, around Albany, Newton, area. I still have a ton of family all over Georgia and Florida.

    • @OrganMusicYT
      @OrganMusicYT Před 3 měsíci +3

      I'm from Scotland and we say "ken" here to say know. Someone could say "ken how" - Know how.

    • @chadm6981
      @chadm6981 Před 3 měsíci +2

      My wife is from Bainbridge.

    • @cantstopcooking929
      @cantstopcooking929 Před 3 měsíci +2

      ​@@IgoZoom1 Alabama is the same. Probably way more dialects than that. Each city or town here has different dialects depending on certain areas and how far up in the country people live. Also generational dialects.

  • @Bob-jm8kl
    @Bob-jm8kl Před 16 hodinami +1

    I'm American but my dad is from England. He moved here young enough that he has a general American accent, but he can turn on the English if he wants to. My grandmother has been here for so many decades that she sounds English to Americans and American to the English. My great-grandfather, I only knew him when I was young, nicest man in the world, and I couldn't understand a word he said. He was from Shropshire. People say Geordie is hard to understand. No that's easy. PS. I could understand most people in this video. There were a couple that were a challenge.

  • @girrl88
    @girrl88 Před měsícem +2

    I love the confused expression on his face. It's ok mate, you should have seen my face when I first watched Trainspotting.

  • @mimic1176
    @mimic1176 Před 3 měsíci +30

    Dude, those of us born and raised in this country don't have any less trouble understanding some of these! I didn't get even one location right! Big props to you for not giving up. I'm willing to blame it on the Scots, too. Well done!
    Had to edit when I saw Justin Wilson! The guy in the red suspenders was Justin Wilson, The Cajun Chef. He had a TV show for a long time and they're worth watching if you can find them online just to listen to him! He also made some awesome Southern dishes. I miss his show.

    • @patrickholland6848
      @patrickholland6848 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Justin Wilson was the bomb! I gawrontee!! 😆

    • @mimic1176
      @mimic1176 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@patrickholland6848 I totally heard that in his voice! Thank you!

    • @bethshadid2087
      @bethshadid2087 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I loved Justin....RIP. Someone has a channel here on utube of his shows.

    • @mimic1176
      @mimic1176 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@bethshadid2087 That rabbit hole has been added to my bookmarks! Another cooking show to get sucked into. Can't wait! :D

    • @bethshadid2087
      @bethshadid2087 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@mimic1176 one of the best shows.....don't forget the wine 😊

  • @IgoZoom1
    @IgoZoom1 Před 3 měsíci +8

    BTW, if anyone is wondering about the woman talking about her sister getting married later in life (TN accent). That is the hilarious Leanne Morgan from TN. She has her own Netflix special and she is becoming a comedy superstar!

  • @Stephanie-kt9vh
    @Stephanie-kt9vh Před 3 měsíci +16

    My Family is from Appalachian Mountains in Virginia, I am the only Tar Heel baby from my Family, I was born In North Carolina. I can tell you, I cannot for the life of me understand a lot of the precious people from Louisiana but I LOVE to hear them talk. I live about 2.5 hours South East of where my family was born and raised and the lingo is quite different. For example, we say Bag, they say Poke. Do you want that in a poke? (WHAT???)
    We say 'Drink' for everything. They say Pop. So you want a glass of pop. We say PANTS they say PAINT. My Aunt said I love your paints.. I said I. Not wearing make up, she grabbed my pants or britches and said, no, paints. Your paints.
    If you're driving fast down the highway, we say he was stretching it out. Or, running like a scalded dog. ... Or flying minus the 'G' so they were flyin'
    A Skunk in Virginia is called a pole cat. We say Taters and maters for potatoes and tomatoes. Little tomatoes are Tommy Toes.
    This was Fascinating for me. Where I live to ME I sound like everyone else, to everyone else having been raised with a Appalachian born and raised family, I have a Southern Twang, which in these parts is called "County" ... They say my accent is Country! You either sound County or City, which is still Country they just don't want to admit It.
    Thank you kindly for sharing this. It was GREAT!
    Be blessed and safe y'all.
    From NC,USA
    This

    • @jeanettereno4045
      @jeanettereno4045 Před 2 měsíci +1

      My old neighbor was from the same Mountains. Her mother was a midwife and the father's family stood guard over the first red delicious apple tree! Her daughter was Cascade Anderson who was a great person to bring herbal medicine into the Mayo clinic back in the early 1970s.

    • @harpintn
      @harpintn Před měsícem +1

      I am an East TN native. I learned to understand Cajun from a girl I dated for a while when I was in my early 20's, as well as a couple of trips I made to NO. It is a hard dialect to understand if you are not exposed to it very much.

    • @S.D._777_
      @S.D._777_ Před měsícem +1

      Southwest Virginian born and raised. We're good for dropping the 'g' off words, 😂. Mornin', Evenin' walkin'. I notice we tend to end -ow words an -a. Window becomes winda. Pole cat isn't used everywhere where here though. When I moved from Southwest to cenral Va for a bit people would look at me like I was nuts. Apparently the further down 81 you go the more 'hickish' it gets. 'Friends' spent years trying to teach me to speak properly, it didn't work. Imma keep calling 'soda' 'pop' and they caint stop me, lol.

    • @minecraftfox4384
      @minecraftfox4384 Před 20 dny

      We don't call skunks pole cats in Virginia.

    • @minecraftfox4384
      @minecraftfox4384 Před 20 dny

      ​@@S.D._777_it's coke, not soda or pop.

  • @odemusvonkilhausen
    @odemusvonkilhausen Před 3 měsíci +8

    For some reason, I'm glad you were stumped on my beloved home state of West Virginia. And I understood everyone in this video, with the exception of a few of the Cajuns, but even with them I could pick out enough to get the basic gist.

  • @eacole72
    @eacole72 Před 3 měsíci +17

    New Orleans also gets influenced by a mid-Atlantic/upstate New York influx that happened around the Civil War. It is hilarious to hear a self-described "swamp rat" speaking in the same accent as someone from Albany, NY.
    If you get a chance to hear the Gullah accent from South Carolina & Georgia, it is a very specific accent & dialect that came about in a similar way to the Lumbee Tribe. Miss Kardea Brown is a chef with a TV show that showcases her home cooking style who grew up on an island in the Atlantic coast Low Country, and she has a moderated Gullah accent.

    • @GeauxMAB_n_Gumbeaux
      @GeauxMAB_n_Gumbeaux Před měsícem

      A New Orleanean would not call themselves a "swamp rat", not ever.
      Videos always focus on Cajun and forget the Creole, Black Louisianians, and Natives. We dont all talk the same.

    • @mizdeb7287
      @mizdeb7287 Před 23 dny

      Heh. I've been here in the Gullah/Geechee corridor so long that I don't notice the accent anymore.

  • @bobwallace9814
    @bobwallace9814 Před 2 měsíci +5

    I've lived in the South my whole life and these all sound normal to me. Want a stupid sounding accent? Try a New York on for size.

  • @scottrackley4457
    @scottrackley4457 Před dnem +1

    6:25 That's Ruby Falls, without a doubt. I've been through there many many times (edit: as boy scouts cleaning the walkways and rails we would get private tours). It's located under Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, and that water, is coming from the Tennessee River which is less than a click from that spout. Truly beautiful place.

  • @Traci2000
    @Traci2000 Před 3 měsíci +6

    This cracked me up!! 😂
    I could follow along with everybody but I'm from Alabama so that's probably why, lol. This was so fun!

  • @ESUSAMEX
    @ESUSAMEX Před 3 měsíci +14

    When people talk about the NY accent, most people are referring to the NYC accent. As a native New Yorker from the NYC area, I have that famous NYC accent. But I must tell you that New York State is much larger than just NYC. I lived on the US border with Quebec, Canada for a couple of years while at college and the people up there do not sound like me. Most sound like Canadians and others sound like French Canadians who speak fluent English. And then if travel westward toward Buffalo, NY, the accent changes yet again. Buffalo is famous for the Buffalo chicken wings and their accent sounds like a mixture of Canadian and the US state of Michigan. Plus there are many more as you head south toward the Pennsylvania border.

    • @douglasharveyii
      @douglasharveyii Před 3 měsíci +6

      THANK YOU! I am from upstate (near Saratoga) and our accent is similar to a Vermont accent, minus the soft 'R's (VT's accent is also getting softer as well as Georgia's, as it was pointed out in this video)
      And in my own dealings, I was in a southern state which I will refrain form mentioning, where a dish was recommended for us to try. After three different times the waitress tried to get us to understand, we gave up. 'Bald penis'. Seems that's what 'boiled peanuts' sounds like where she's from! (I would turn it down either way!)

    • @jdstep97
      @jdstep97 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I'm a native southerner, and when I hear someone from NY state (Not NYC), I always think they are from somewhere other than NY, like Michigan or Wisconsin. So many of us, especially southerners, think everyone in the state of NY should sound like the people in NYC.

    • @MsVakong
      @MsVakong Před 2 měsíci +2

      ​@@douglasharveyii​ Hearing "bald penis" instead of boiled peanuts is hilarious! 😂😂😂

  • @Swampzoid
    @Swampzoid Před 3 měsíci +3

    I'm 62 born and raised in Savannah, Georgia. I speak with a slight accent. You would understand me easily. These people in the video have very strong accents. It's funny that you can't understand them. I could understand them no problem.

  • @Nolefan.Since.80
    @Nolefan.Since.80 Před měsícem +1

    This was absolutely epic!! 🤣🤣🤣 I was laughing my ass off the whole time. I didn't realize I spoke so many languages 🧐🤔🤪🤣🤣🤣

  • @Timotimo101
    @Timotimo101 Před 3 měsíci +15

    Being originally from the South (USA) I'd say that I understood 99.9% of what they all said. Also, I understood your Australian accent very easily. On the other hand, there are some strong accents from Great Britain and/or Ireland that I can find very difficult to understand (and if it's in a video I'll need subtitles.) Of course, RP - such as what is on the BBC, is easy to understand. Accents are fascinating, and dialects too, and I thank you kindly for sharing your reaction with us.

    • @carolburnett190
      @carolburnett190 Před 3 měsíci +3

      The hardest one for me to understand is the Welsh! Although I did meet a guy from Liverpool once, and couldn’t understand a thing he said.

    • @jdstep97
      @jdstep97 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Tennessee here. I'm with you 100%. I have to listen real hard to understand folks from Scotland.

    • @wordforger
      @wordforger Před 3 měsíci +3

      There's some footie fans from somewhere up North (Manchester, I think?) that I was completely lost understanding. I had to ask an English friend if he understood them... and he did. It was almost a reverse Boomhauer.

    • @Timotimo101
      @Timotimo101 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@jdstep97 TN is where i'm from originally - Nashville. Will visit in June and anxious to get back and see friends and family.

    • @KentuckyLadyLiberty
      @KentuckyLadyLiberty Před 3 měsíci +3

      Never drink with a person from Glasgow who is trying to teach you to say "Edinburgh" properly. Trust me on this. It's now my goal next time we meet that I teach this friend to say "sh!t-fire" like a rural Kentuckian.

  • @Denalicat
    @Denalicat Před 3 měsíci +9

    Since I have actually lived in Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida and was born in Alabama and have "kin" in Tennessee, Georgia and Texas I understand all but let me tell you when we first got to Bogue Chitto Mississippi (the place of my husbands family) I felt like I was in a foreign country. My daughter did the TikTok Shakespeare southern accent challenge and

  • @jasoneastep3081
    @jasoneastep3081 Před 12 dny +1

    @patrolnation you called kentucky on our drink. Lol good on you. The old man wearing hat at 9.30 said. "You're always going up a mountain, see what I am saying. He walks straight, back and forth. He dose not that side to side, all that bull crap. He gose straight, if he builds it straight build it straight. And thats his natural movement. And in religion, you keep your hart in your head, and uou still be doing better than avrage. Dont listen to him.) As a life long kentuckian I will say i wanma know what they were talkin about before this response. Great video.

  • @VineVitumEt5
    @VineVitumEt5 Před 15 dny +2

    I am from the Midwest and I understood them perfectly. 😊

  • @normora5857
    @normora5857 Před 3 měsíci +12

    OMG my fist language is not English, and I speak a couple of other ones, but THIS.... I couldn't understand anything. I would never have guessed this was supposed to be English.

  • @pamelahughes341
    @pamelahughes341 Před 3 měsíci +8

    Hey, The Best Whiskey comes from Tennessee!! We claim Dolly Parton as ours too (we choose to share her with the world because she is so special). A "Bless They're Heart" would be a give-a-way for anyone from the South! God Bless America and all of the people from the South who don't mind being teased about the way they talk! GO VOLS!!

    • @harpintn
      @harpintn Před měsícem +1

      My wife's family is from Pigeon Forge, so I am sure she has some common ancestors with Dolly.

  • @estern001
    @estern001 Před měsícem +2

    Every person in that video says, "I'm an American." God bless all of them. I'm an American too.

  • @tessab.5379
    @tessab.5379 Před 3 měsíci +6

    Proud southern lady born and raised in Florida. We are dwindling in numbers now. I have people ask me if I'm from north Georgia. I'm from north central Florida.

    • @kristenb5177
      @kristenb5177 Před 3 měsíci +2

      A lot people now living in the South are from up North .

    • @echt114
      @echt114 Před 2 měsíci

      "Proud"? What's behind that? Are you saying you're superior to others in some way?

    • @echt114
      @echt114 Před 2 měsíci

      @@kristenb5177 You're not the one that wrote it.

    • @echt114
      @echt114 Před 2 měsíci

      @@kristenb5177 Happy has a different meaning and feeling from proud. Seems any mountain building is coming from you since you also weren't asked the original question.

    • @echt114
      @echt114 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@kristenb5177 I asked a question and you use that to extrapolate, lie and personally insult. What would cause someone to do that? Did you originally come from some dysfunctional culture or did you achieve that on your own through defiance?

  • @user-xz4wd9zg4h
    @user-xz4wd9zg4h Před 3 měsíci +10

    Understood them all. These are warm loving people

  • @Aurora-cv5to
    @Aurora-cv5to Před 3 měsíci +8

    I grew up in Michigan but have been in all 50 states. The only person I absolutely couldn't understand was from the Tennessee Hills. My x was from Louisville, Kentucky, and he had to translate for me. (Best coaching on Louisville I can do is: Loo a vul, but the end has to be said deep in your throat like you're swallowing it.)

    • @mswitch936
      @mswitch936 Před 3 měsíci +5

      You can really tell where someone is from based on how you pronounce Louisville.

    • @nicks3935
      @nicks3935 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I have herd it pronounced like louie vil it's about 200 miles west from where I live by I-64 .

  • @patriciabock4299
    @patriciabock4299 Před 2 měsíci +3

    I have a southern accent that is only recognized as a London, KY accent. So, in each state you can have a large range of different southern accents. When I say the word tire it sounds like tar. The longer you listen to southern accents the more you will start to understand what is being said!

  • @cuteutgirl04
    @cuteutgirl04 Před měsícem +1

    Tennessee girl here. I understood everyone, but I absolutely get why folks from other places get confused. 😂 Y’all come for a visit, and we’ll help translate.

  • @sherismith2890
    @sherismith2890 Před 3 měsíci +10

    I understand everyone but I am from kentucky and my husband is from Georgia. Everything sounds fine to me.

    • @danielkirk2649
      @danielkirk2649 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Kentuckian myself...all understood, but no chance I could go deep Louisiana

    • @danielkirk2649
      @danielkirk2649 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Alt-Bayerisch is the only dialect that is truly out of this world; learnt a LITTLE by eating lunch everyday with this very elderly couple in no-where Bavaria. Probably less than 100 people still speak it/understand it. People always say Latin is a dead language haha...alt-Bayerisch will be completely forgotten within a decade...hopefully some Bavarian's read this.

  • @CaptainJacksIsland
    @CaptainJacksIsland Před 3 měsíci +7

    I've had to stand between two people and translate for them because one of them couldn't understand the Georgia accent, but it looked like a comedy skit to me because I'm so used to accents that they both sound like plain English, so it felt like I was just repeating everything.

  • @AlexJW224
    @AlexJW224 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Im from the Midwest near St. Louis but in Illinois and I could understand 90% of these accents just fine lol

  • @natsinthebelfry
    @natsinthebelfry Před měsícem +1

    I was born and raised in Oregon but I promise you I understand all these accents. I doubt most people from around here do, but since I'm a big fan of travelling and linguistics they all make total sense to me.

  • @peggysoutherland1183
    @peggysoutherland1183 Před 3 měsíci +52

    LOL. I understood all of them too

  • @hellefur7861
    @hellefur7861 Před 3 měsíci +9

    I remember when you listen to Austin Brown's song "Earn it", and you are just as confused now as you where then 😂😂😂
    And yes I understood most of it, exept the Bayou 😂😂

  • @baileyfortney
    @baileyfortney Před 18 dny

    Cajun here! I love seeing people’s reactions to hearing us talk😂 my grandmothers accent is so thick a lot of people who aren’t from Louisiana find it hard to understand her.

  • @Cipherkat
    @Cipherkat Před 15 dny +1

    It's weird to see someone not understand something that you understandXD
    I just hear them talking about how they're all kin, and he asks for subtitlesXD
    I love this♡XD

  • @mrnosaj71
    @mrnosaj71 Před 3 měsíci +5

    I'm northern US and I understand the southern accent fine, I've been to England and that cockney accent I still have trouble with.

  • @hackermusic3355
    @hackermusic3355 Před 3 měsíci +8

    When I was a kid I lived in a valley in north Alabama and I could tell the difference in the accent of valley people and Lookout Mountain people a mile east and Sand mountain people a mile west.
    Now so many people move around that it would be harder to tell the differences.
    More and more people don't have a strong accent because of media. When I moved to Illinois and northern Missouri people would ask me why I didn't have a southern accent. I would tell them I did.
    One time my younger brother was watching TV and somebody from Britain was talking. My brother said, "Why don't they just speak English?" I told him they do and that we are the ones that butcher it up.

    • @RebelCowboysRVs
      @RebelCowboysRVs Před 3 měsíci +3

      Sand Mountain native here. It was easy to tell 30 years ago, not so much now. The valley has more of an Alabama draw. Sand mountain sounds more like The Tennessee Mountain twang. Lookout sounds like Chattanooga on its north end.

    • @randallross7683
      @randallross7683 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Valley head ala

  • @LoriMooreThompson
    @LoriMooreThompson Před 3 měsíci +3

    They are all perfectly easy to understand!

  • @waynemiles10
    @waynemiles10 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Don't feel bad dude, we have a hard time understanding each other too. I'm from South Carolina and there's about four different types of accents just in our one little state.

  • @kiekie84
    @kiekie84 Před 3 měsíci +8

    He's my kin.” (Meaning that he's related.) It's often paired with the word “folk”. Like this: “Invite your kinfolk over for dinner tonight.” (Meaning to invite your relatives.)

    • @nancyfried7239
      @nancyfried7239 Před měsícem

      Except someone referring to kinfolk would invite them to supper.😊

  • @41dfcpea90
    @41dfcpea90 Před měsícem +1

    Arkansas here, love my southern roots and accent lol and yes I understood all that good stuff lol!

  • @user-ol2so9ce2q
    @user-ol2so9ce2q Před 3 měsíci +4

    I had never been to the South until the last seven years. Pick a spot and travel the backroads for a couple of days. You will encounter the loveliest, big hearted people you'll ever meet. You won't even notice an accent until closing time at the bar.
    One tip though, if you make a statement and someone replies "Why! Bless your heart!" You have just said the dumbest thing they have ever heard. 😊😊

  • @zackster1973
    @zackster1973 Před 3 měsíci +6

    While I was in college I worked offshore in the oilfield, off the coast of Louisiana. We had an Australian rig engineer come out and watching him try to communicate with all the Cajuns was hilarious!

    • @sirtango1
      @sirtango1 Před 18 dny +1

      I would have loved to hear a conversation between them about pigging lines! 😂 Th Aussie would want to run a X-ray pig and the Cajuns would want to BBQ it! 😂 Great! Now I’m hungry!

    • @zackster1973
      @zackster1973 Před 11 dny +1

      @sirtango1 Australian engineer came into the galley looking "aluminum foil". Can't spell it the way either of them did! Tool pusher had to break them up, LOL

  • @SayYoJ
    @SayYoJ Před 3 měsíci +4

    I’m from Louisiana born and raised and our accent is just like our gumbo a mix of a little bit of everything southern!

  • @CherryBlossomDragon
    @CherryBlossomDragon Před 3 měsíci +3

    Don't feel bad that you can't understand us, even voice programs have difficulty with Southern accents. I've completely given up on using them because they can't seem to understand a dang thing I say. I despise running into them over the phone because I know I'm going to have to endlessly repeat myself. And the older I get the thicker my accent seems to become. 😂

  • @user-ic8rz7ol2w
    @user-ic8rz7ol2w Před 7 dny +1

    I’m a southerner live in Tennessee and understand just fine !! 💖💕💫

  • @leeannkaplan57
    @leeannkaplan57 Před 3 měsíci +7

    Of course he was highlighting the accents of folks in the most isolated or rural parts of those states, so naturally the accents would be more pronounced and unique. Like I mentioned in one of the zoom calls, in Georgia for instance, the further from Atlanta you go, the more drawl or twang you’ll get. Of those accents, Cajun is the only one that really flys straight over my head.

    • @SeanMcGeeWebDude
      @SeanMcGeeWebDude Před 3 měsíci +3

      Same with Texas. If you grew up a native english speaker in a town over 50,000 people, you probably can be understood by most folks. But the more rural you get, the more extreme the accent.

    • @RaeThomas-hh5gv
      @RaeThomas-hh5gv Před měsícem +1

      not really, though? new orleans couldn't be called isolated by any means and it was featured, along with atlanta. i think he did a good job of demonstrating how urban areas and rural areas had significant accent differences to what would be considered "broadcaster" American english. urban American accents are now understood a bit better simply because of the proliferation of RnB and hip hop music/culture. thirty years ago, no one outside of the US would be able to easily understand an AAVE dialect with accent.

  • @franciet99
    @franciet99 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Funny your example at the end… I worked with someone that I could swear his accent was from New York City. He was from New Orleans. As he was speaking about in the video, there are so many influences in Louisiana and you will see so many variations in one state. I think more variations than any other state.

  • @maryefromky
    @maryefromky Před 26 dny +1

    i'm translating a bunch of these just for fun, i'm from the Appalachian part of Kentucky and i absolutely love this region of the US. every bit of this was just like, talkin, to me. i can't believe we're so hard to understand! lol. here goes.
    that black feller said "i don't care about the budget, i'm gonna go out, i'm gonna have a good time. i'm gonna travel. if the money's in the account and the bills are paid, we're doin' it, alright?"
    white feller: "i'm new to this whole posting videos thang, but i hope y'all enjoy at least hearin me talk or somethin like that, but uh, i appreciate it".
    feller with an extra long beard standin by a barn: "we're all kin somewhere in Virginia, somewhere along the line. oh yeah, you and me are kin." then they're just discussing how closely related or "kin" they are to each other. commonly said in Appalachia.
    feller in the tractor with a long white beard and hat: "mostly it's just you mind your own business, and let everybody else mind their business, y'know what i'm sayin? we just wanna be left alone, let us do our thang, we'll let you do your thang."
    this old feller fishin is my favorite, i knew it, this is from Kentucky. he said, "i've been a lot of places when i was in the marine corps, by gosh and drove a truck. never been nowhere else i wanna come back to. i like it. wouldn't live nowhere's else. friend of mine, we garden a good bit, plant a lot of sweet corn to sell, taters (potatoes), other stuff."
    that moonshiner is a legendary Appalachian outlaw by the name of Popcorn Sutton, he's from Maggie Valley NC, in the southern part of Appalachia. He is Appalachia personified. he said: "anything i've ever used to make liquor (likker) out of: sugar, meal, rye, barley, whatever, the jars that it's put in, i think it's my business to make it. I bought it, and I figure what's mine is mine."
    feller in a black cowboy hat and white beard: "when a man's goin up the mountains, see what i'm sayin', he walks straight, back and forth. he does not side to side, all that BULL crap (lol). he goes straight. (missed the next sentence, something about building stuff straight). and religion, you're keepin your heart and your head, you're still able to do better than average. don't listen to the man".
    chubby younger feller with beard: "i was just havin an argument with the boy up the road about who has the bigger trailer. its me" LOL
    second younger guy with beard: "y'ever have a day where you just feel ... beautiful? i dunno if you can hear em or not, but there's sandhill cranes over there. sometimes you just gotta stop and appreciate nature."
    the cajun feller, i actually could not understand him when he's singing, haha! but i could when he was talking. he was saying "sometimes we'll start a conversation, and finish it in French".
    second cajun feller with a red tie and red suspenders: " i got a friend who got a shicken farm (chickens, lol), great big shicken farm. but when he started out, he wasn't big, no. so what he do, he start with just a few shickens, they all up there and they built a blackstop road by his house (blacktop or asphalt road)."
    next cajun feller sitting by a bayou, i'm guessing, or a swamp talking to a lady interviewing him: "they was 4 cents a pound. for the black ones. the gray ones, we had to put them in the water to let it chill itself, and later on we go back and we put it on [missed this word]. three or four weeks later, we had to come back, they turn black."
    feller sittin on a porch of a blue house: "we got water in the mantrip we was riding in, we was in the back of it, and that water, it was 12 breaks of water backed up, and it just blowed that coal out just like an explosion, ya know?" so a mantrip is the little vehicles they use to drive the miners down into the coal mines. he was talking about working in the mines in eastern Kentucky. my people :)

  • @flatcat6676
    @flatcat6676 Před měsícem +1

    Love that they pulled ol' Popcorn Sutton in this video. RIP Popcorn - all the damn revenue men are well behind you now.

  • @nerdcamel
    @nerdcamel Před dnem +1

    As a southerner, I understood it all. Kin is family members

  • @zarahbelle3627
    @zarahbelle3627 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Resident Georgia Peach & Atl Shawdy in the chat, lol! The sound he made is in fact a real thing. He basically said "You know what I'm saying?"

    • @TexasDonna-xu6fq
      @TexasDonna-xu6fq Před 3 měsíci +1

      😂😂😂😂

    • @thesharinganknight9859
      @thesharinganknight9859 Před 7 dny +1

      Exactly I’m from Atlanta and said “Nah fr” after he said that. The A is truely is an mix of the AAVE accent and a typical Georgia dialects

  • @CindyNavarro
    @CindyNavarro Před 3 měsíci +5

    They all sounded normal to me, but I live in Alabama. 😀♥ By the way, I did live in [Thurso, Caithness,] Scotland for 3 years and I usually understood any of the accents I heard. I thought Billy Connolly was hilarious, but my husband (from Hawaii) never understood anything he said.

  • @Impericalevidence
    @Impericalevidence Před 26 dny +1

    "You better hols on to dem(them) cornichons."
    "Hold on to your pickles!" Talking about the weqther.

  • @theblackbear211
    @theblackbear211 Před měsícem +1

    I can remember being in the US Navy over 40 years ago, and having to serve as an interpreter between 2 of my shipmates - who each had a strong accent - but from 2 completely different parts of the US. I could understand them both, but they couldn't understand each other.

  • @AngieCurl
    @AngieCurl Před 3 měsíci +5

    This is hilarious. 😂 I understood all of it.. ❤ #Texan

  • @parkerbrown-nesbit1747
    @parkerbrown-nesbit1747 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Born and raised in Western Kentucky but I don't sound like it (people have thought I was from Boston, Canada, and England).
    I had no problem understanding any of them.

  • @kellychamplin1800
    @kellychamplin1800 Před 2 měsíci +2

    I’m actually from coastal North Carolina - you’d probably be comfortable hearing the Old Salts in Salter Path and Beaufort, NC. The accent in coastal South Carolina, however, is COMPLETELY different- a war between genteel Charleston and the sweet rhythm of Gullah on the Sea Islands…. You get used to hearing the differences!
    And people say that Americans aren’t “well travelled..,”
    Hon, I can list off 10 different accents and dialects within 200 miles of my house!😎🤣🤣

  • @jameson32
    @jameson32 Před měsícem +1

    I'm Mainer and have zero issues with these dialects. If anything, southerners have a tough time understanding me. We evidently speak very quickly.

  • @hunterwolfe6295
    @hunterwolfe6295 Před 3 měsíci +6

    Yeah I understand them all..

  • @emilyb5307
    @emilyb5307 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Lol. "The Other Lady in the car" said:
    "Why I talk the way I do - cuz the good Lord blessed me with this accent! I like it. I like it just fine!"
    These are all pretty easy for me to understand...are they really that difficult to track for non-Americans?
    6:46 "I been a lotta places when I was in the Marine Corp by gosh, and drove a truck - and I aint never been nowhere I wouldn't wanna be back. I like it. Wouldn't live nowheres else."

  • @sandralewis4216
    @sandralewis4216 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I'm a Georgia Peach and yes I have a southern accent and proud of it. I understood them all just find.

  • @debrashrider4062
    @debrashrider4062 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Grew up in Detroit. Soooo many different american accents and add in the accents of those who came from other countries. All here to work in auto factories, etc. Plus canadian Ontario accents and French canadian accents. And our own Upper Pennisula accent. I will lay my money on any lower michigan residents being able to understand any accented english. We may not catch each word, but we will hear what you say and understand it. Oir ears are very accepting.

  • @mage1439
    @mage1439 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I'm a little bit freaked out. When I saw the clips from WV, I thought "that looks like Matewan," and sure enough.

    • @dngillikin
      @dngillikin Před 3 měsíci +2

      I've never been to Matewan, but I did live for nine years in Beckley over in Raleigh County.
      When we had the two guys talking next to the truck, I initially wondered (before the reveal) if they were up near Thurmond in my former section of WV, which doubled for the real Matawan in the John Sayles film.

    • @ikreer9777
      @ikreer9777 Před 2 měsíci +1

      First man said "man-trip" and it confirmed my initial thought-my home, WV. My grandpa was a coal miner, so the lingo confirmed the accent.